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Reachout Trust
24 Ormond Road
Richmond Surrey
TW10 6TH
England

Phone & Fax:
0845 241 2158

E-mail

A company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales, number 4162936.
A registered charity number 1087085

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  With God on our side (John 8:47)

Bob Dylan wrote the following as an indictment against nations who fight each other, each believing God is on their side:

My name it is nothing, my age it means less.
The country I come from is called the mid-west.
I was born and brought up there the laws to abide
And that country I live in has God on its side.


We sometimes hear people say that one person and God is a majority and many stepping out in God's service believe they do so with God on their side. Of course, he often is but I don't think this is the way to look at it.

In John chapter 8 we witness one of the most fierce, even violent confrontations between Jesus and the religious authorities. Jesus was berating them for not accepting his message. They did not accept it because they had a very high view of themselves. When they objected that "The only Father we have is God himself", you can almost touch their comfortable, but erroneous, assumptions. Jesus replied:

"If God were your Father, you would love me, for I came from God and now am hear…He who belongs to God hears what God says. The reason you do not hear is that you do not belong to God" (v.v.42-47).

The problem here was that, although they were convinced that God was on their side, the truth was that they were not on God's side. Had they been they would, indeed, have received Jesus.

In today's world, contrary to popular myth, people are still making decisions based on their, often religious, convictions. They are frequently convinced that they are bound to prosper because God is on their side and Bob Dylan's song is perhaps more relevant than ever, no matter what the secularists may claim.

But, like the Pharisees of Jesus' day, we can convince ourselves that our agenda always meets with God's approval when all along God has something quite different to say to us. It is a simple thing to fall into the error of thinking that our way is God's way, when surely we should be asking whether God's way is our way. In the simple, every-day decisions of life are we prepared to learn and grow, or are we, like the Pharisees, so entrenched in our traditions and practices that we cannot remember the last time we actually sought to know the mind and will of God?

Another sixties songsmith wrote the following:

All through the years I, me, mine, I, me, mine, I, me, mine.
All I can hear I, me, mine, I, me, mine, I, me, mine.
No one's frightened of saying it, everyone's playing it,
Coming on strong all the time.
All through the day, I, me, mine.


Have we asked ourselves recently, "whom am I really serving these days? Am I following the dead letter of habit? Or am I seeking the guidance of God's living Word and Spirit?" Perhaps we should not be asking whether God is on our side (of course he is if we seek to trust and serve him) but whether we are on his side. You see God is a majority on his own and we can lose sight of that if we convince ourselves that it is all about us. It is not - it is all about God.

May the Lord make himself known to you afresh this week as you seek his face.

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